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How Much Does Laser Scar Removal Cost in the UK?

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The honest answer to “how much does laser scar removal cost in the UK?” is between £350 and £1,800 per session, depending on the scar type, the size of the treatment area, and which laser technology is being used. Most patients need a course of 3 to 6 sessions to see meaningful improvement, and total treatment costs typically land between £1,000 and £5,000 for a course. Surgical scar revision and combined approaches sit in their own price bracket.

This guide sets out UK pricing for laser scar removal, the factors that move costs up or down, when laser is the right answer and when another approach would be better, and how laser scar removal fits within the wider service at Centre for Surgery’s CQC-regulated Baker Street private hospital.

Laser scar removal pricing — what to expect

Pricing at Centre for Surgery for laser scar treatment:

Most patients need a course of 3 to 6 sessions spaced 4 to 8 weeks apart. Total treatment cost depends on the scar size, the number of sessions needed, and any adjunctive treatment combined with laser.

Precise pricing for any individual case is established at consultation. The variables include scar size, scar depth, anatomical location, skin type, and whether the laser will be with other treatments such as intralesional steroid injection or radiofrequency microneedling.

through Chrysalis Finance is available across all treatment plans to spread the cost.

Factors that influence cost

Different scar types respond to different laser modalities, and that affects .

For on which scar type you have, see .

A single small scar costs less per session than a larger anatomical area or multiple scars. Full-face acne scar resurfacing is the most expensive single-session treatment because it covers the largest surface area; isolated linear scars are at the lower end.

Different laser platforms suit different scar types:

The right laser for your scar is established at consultation based on the scar type, your skin type, and what other treatments may be combined.

Most scar treatment courses involve 3 to 6 sessions. More severe scarring, larger areas, or scars that have proven resistant to previous treatments may need more. Some scars improve after a single session; others need the full course to reach the desired endpoint.

The best results often come from combining several treatments. For acne scarring specifically, comprehensive plans typically include laser, radiofrequency microneedling, TCA CROSS for individual deep scars, and sometimes targeted filler. Combined plans are priced as packages rather than per-session, and finance options are typically structured around the full course.

Laser treatment for different scar types — what to expect

Atrophic acne scars (ice-pick, boxcar, rolling) are the most common indication for laser scar resurfacing. Fractional laser produces collagen remodelling that gradually fills in shallow depressions and improves surface texture. Most patients see improvement after a course of 3 to 4 sessions, with continued refinement for several months after the final treatment.

For deeper acne scars — particularly ice-pick scars — laser alone is often not enough. Combined approaches using TCA CROSS for individual scars, dermal filler for selected depressions, and laser or Morpheus8 across the broader area produce better results than any single modality alone. For full discussion see , , , and .

Pulsed-dye laser is the laser approach for red, raised scars. It targets the small blood vessels within the scar tissue, reducing redness and softening texture. Often with intralesional injection for the most effective flattening. For full discussion see

Keloids — scars that extend beyond the original wound boundary — need a combined treatment approach. Laser is rarely the sole intervention. The standard plan includes intralesional steroid injection (the workhorse), silicone treatment, and sometimes laser to address redness. Surgical excision combined with post-operative steroid injection is reserved for steroid-resistant cases. For background see .

Most mature surgical scars don’t need laser treatment — silicone, sun protection, and time are sufficient. Where a surgical scar matures unfavourably with persistent redness or raised texture, fractional laser resurfacing or pulsed-dye laser can substantially improve the result. Started at 3+ months post-operation for most patients.

The hardest scar type to treat with laser. Fractional laser can produce modest improvement in texture and partial in some cases, but complete pigment restoration is rare. Realistic expectations are improvement rather than full . See

How does laser compare to alternative scar treatments?

Laser is one of several tools for scar improvement — not the only one, and not always the right one. The realistic comparison:

The right choice depends on the specific scar — type, location, depth, skin type, and what other approaches have already been tried. Consultation establishes the best treatment plan rather than committing to laser by default.

What’s included in laser scar removal pricing

Laser scar removal pricing at Centre for Surgery includes:

Additional costs to consider silicone scar products for home use (typically £20–40 per tube), sun products, and any adjunctive treatments (intralesional steroid sessions, dermal filler if used alongside).

What’s not included on the NHS: laser scar removal is generally categorised as a procedure and not funded by the NHS except in specific functional cases. Most patients seeking laser scar treatment proceed .

Recovery and downtime

Different laser modalities have different recovery profiles:

Recovery is shorter than many expect, particularly with the more modern fractional systems. Diligent sun protection during the recovery window is essential.

What about NHS treatment?

NHS funding anti-Wrinkle for women laser scar removal is restricted. The procedure is generally categorised as and falls outside NHS . Specific exceptions exist for cases with functional impairment (such as severe contracture scars restricting movement) but the great majority of scar treatment is private.

For considering private treatment, the cost is balanced against the realistic improvement possible and what alternative might achieve. A frank consultation establishes whether laser is the right intervention and what the realistic would be.

What we don’t recommend

Frequently asked questions

Typically 3 to 6 sessions spaced 4 to 8 weeks apart. The exact number depends on scar type, severity, and how the scar responds to early treatment. Some patients need fewer, some more.

Laser scar improvement is largely permanent — the collagen remodelling produced by the treatment is stable tissue that doesn’t reverse. Patients don’t typically need treatment for the original scar once the course is complete.

Most patients tolerate laser well with topical anaesthetic. The sensation is variously described as a hot prickle or rubber-band snap. More aggressive ablative settings may need additional comfort measures. Pain is brief and limited to the treatment session.

Yes — most fractional treatments produce 1–5 days of redness, mild swelling and small scabs. Ablative laser longer recovery. The is discussed at consultation so you can plan around social events.

No. Laser can produce substantial improvementreducing redness, flattening texture, smoothing depressed scars — but no treatment can entirely eliminate a scar. Realistic expectations are significant improvement, not invisibility.

Settings need to be calibrated to skin type. Darker skin types (Fitzpatrick IV–VI) carry higher risk of pigmentation changes with aggressive ablative laser; Morpheus8 radiofrequency microneedling is often a safer alternative. The consultation establishes the right approach for your specific skin type.

Yes — most comprehensive scar treatment plans combine modalities. Laser + intralesional steroid for hypertrophic scars; laser + TCA CROSS + Morpheus8 for acne scars; laser + revision for mature unfavourable scars. Combined plans are priced as .

Generally no. Laser scar is categorised as cosmetic and is not routinely available on the NHS. functional cases may qualify but most patients proceed privately.

Scar improvement is progressive and continues for months after the final session. Apparent under-response at the end of the course often becomes a satisfactory result by 6 months. Where additional treatment is needed, further sessions or a switch to a different modality can be planned at review.

Yes — through Chrysalis Finance is available across all scar treatment plans, allowing the cost of a full course to be spread monthly.

Centre for Surgery is a CQC-regulated plastic surgery clinic at 95–97 Baker Street, Marylebone. We offer the full range of laser scar treatmentspulsed-dye laser for red and raised scars, fractional non-ablative and ablative resurfacing for textural improvement, with intralesional steroid injection, , dermal filler, and where appropriate . All treatment plans are tailored to the specific scar and skin type. No GP referral required.

For guides, see , , , , , and

Centre for Surgery · CQC-regulated · GMC specialist-registered surgeons · · · ·

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Centre for Surgery is a CQC-regulated private hospital on London’s Baker Street, delivering plastic and cosmetic surgery through GMC-registered specialist surgeons. Our expertise spans facial procedures including and , , for men, and body contouring procedures such as and . safety, surgical excellence and natural-looking results sit at the heart of everything we do.

Centre for Surgery is a CQC-regulated private hospital on London’s iconic , offering and cosmetic surgery led by GMC-registered consultant surgeons.

Marylebone

London

W1U 6RN


Mon – Sat, 9am – 6pm

Saturday consultations available

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